While the rest of the consumer electronics industry languishes in recession,
computer makers and software developers are experiencing steady, if less than
spectacular, growth. The thrills surrounding the PC and videogame exhibits at
the 1991 International Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago were bolstered by
advances in PC software entertainment and a new generation of videogame
consoles. More than 250 companies that had never participated in a Summer CES,
including IBM, Wang Labs, Leading Edge, and Prodigy, picked up on the
excitement. Here's a preview of some of the products that are heading your way
this fall.

Accolade

Who is kidnapping the biggest stars in Hollywood? To help you solve this
sinister mystery, call in the man who found the world's greatest entertainer
in Accolade's first graphic adventure, Search for the King, and now stars in
the sequel, Les Manly In: Lost in L.A. ($59.95).

Mike Ditka Ultimate Football ($54.95) is the first football simulation to
feature multiangle player perspective, allowing computer coaches to view the
action from any of four different viewing angles.

In Elvira II: The Jaws of Cerberus ($59.95) players must rescue Elvira from
the ghastly Cerberus, a 60-foot tall, three-headed demon. See our Sneak Peek
of this game on page 121 in this issue.

Ad Lib

The competition among sound-card makers heats up with Ad Lib's announcement of
its Gold Series. The Gold PC-1000 ($300) is a basic sound card for disk-based
applications that features a microphone jack and tabletop microphone, game and
MIDI ports, and standard stereo input/output jacks. The Gold PC-2000 ($400)
adds a SCSI interface for CD-ROM applications. The Gold MC-2000 ($500) is
designed for the IBM PS/2 MCA bus. All of the cards carry 20 channels of
synthesized sound, 2 channels for sampled sound, stereo recording and
playback, enhanced FM synthesis, 12-bit stereo digital-to-analog conversion
and other professional features. Originally scheduled for a late summer
release, Ad Lib says chip shortages have delayed release of the Gold Series
until late fall at the earliest.

Broderbund

Game designer Chris Crawford is back with Patton Strikes Back ($59.95). This
strategy game puts you in command of Allied or Axis troops during the Battle
of the Bulge. This war game emphasizes tactical thinking over weapons skills.
It's packed with data and analysis.

California Dreams

Take over as leader of Poland's workers union in Solidarity ($59.95) and
attempt to lead the country to freedom in the face of tremendous Soviet
military and economic pressures. Or, take the helm of a high-tech submarine in
Wreck Hunters (price not available at press time), the working title of a new
interactive game in which you search for sunken treasure.

Data East

Data East's latest combat game is - get this - compatible with Novell
networks. Guide a fleet of mechanized droids against an alien race that has
practically obliterated humanity from the face of the planet. Operate scout,
supply, and soldier robots over a harsh landscape. A two-player mode allows
for cooperative play against the mysterious aliens. The network version will
support from six to seven players. The stand-alone version of Ultrabots
Sanction: Earth will ship to stores this month. The company expects to have
the network version ready by late November (just in time for that Christmas
office party). The price wasn't available at press time.

Data East's other introductions included Battlefield 2000, the working title
for a tank-battle game ($59.95), Bo Jackson Baseball ($49.95), and ABC Wide
World of Sports Boxing (price unavailable at press time).

Electronic Arts

Big new products from EA include Chuck Yeager's Air Combat ($59.95) and Earl
Weaver Baseball II ($49.95). A Sneak Peek of Air Combat appeared in the July
issue of COMPUTE. Racing fans can get behind the wheel of Mario Andretti's
Racing Challenge ($49.95).

Powermonger ($49.95), from the makers of Populous, casts you as the leader of
a displaced tribe newly arrived in an uncharted territory.

Electronic Zoo

This fall, look for Eco Phantoms ($49.95), a struggle for earth's survival;
The Ball Game ($49.95), a test of strategy and reflexes; Geisha ($49.95), the
Orient of the future; Star Collection ($29.95), a collection of great arcade
hits; and Peghole ($49.95), a classic tactical game.

Konami

Simpson fans can get radical with Bart Simpson's House of Weirdness ($49.95),
an adventure/strategy game that challenges players to be as resourceful as
Bart. Simpson's Arcade ($49.95) is a conversion of the coin-op.

Challenge your ninja skills and fight crime in Manhattan with Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles: The Adventure ($49.95). If you want more Turtle action, try
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Arcade Game ($49.95). More movie action is
heading your way with Back to the Future III ($39.95). and Predator 2
($19.95).

Baseball card collectors have a new utility to help them manage and track
their collections. It's the Official Collector Series - Baseball Card
Collector ($49.95). This could make an excellent holiday gift for the hardball
fan on your list.

Topping the long list of Konami's brand-new role-playing games is Steve
Peterson's Champions ($59.95), a multipart adventure with more than 20
villains to conquer. The Killing Cloud ($49.95) has you fighting an organized
gang in San Francisco. For the more fantastically oriented, Riders of Rohan
($49.95) gives players a chance to build their own saga in true Tolkien
flavor. If Middle Earth doesn't appeal to you, perhaps outer space does. Try
Spacewrecked: 14 Billion Light Years From Earth ($49.95). Or venture into
inner space in the ancient thriller Bloodwych ($39.95). For couch potatoes,
Mission: Impossible ($49.95) combines action, adventure, and role-playing - if
you choose to accept it.

Two Konami simulations include Team Suzuki ($39.95) and Top Gun Head-to-Head
Dogfighting Simulator ($49.95). Action gamers can test their roller derby
skills in the high-contact game RollerBabes ($39.95). Speedball 2 ($39.95) is
a futuristic sport featuring armor and weaponry.

LucasArts Entertainment

Guybrush Threepwood is back in a swashbuckling adventure called The secret of
Monkey Island II: LeChuck's Revenge ($59.95). Visit new puzzle-packed islands
with many of the zany characters from the first game. And look for an original
game not based on a movie in Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis ($59.95).
Indy is drawn into the ancient mysteries of the fascinating and legendary
undersea world.

Maxis

This fall's oddest game just might be SimAnt (price unavailable), an ant
colony simulation (no kidding) complete with rival bands of black and red
ants, a hungry spider, a nosy kid with a mean garden hose, and a pesky dog.
Try to get your colony insider the house, where the readily good food is.

MicroProse

MicroProse has a large slate of products scheduled for fall and spring
releases. Topping the list is Sid Meier's Civilization (price unavailable).
This simulation begins in 4000 B.C. and players must develop an entire
civilization from a small, nomadic tribe. By balancing economics, politics,
and defense, it's possible for the tribe to evolve into a civilization of
tomorrow. The game may be played for an entire 6000-year span or in 100-year
periods - not real time, of course.

The spring of 1992 will bring MicroProse's first fantasy role-playing game.
Live in fifteenth century Germany, a violent time of three popes, powerless
emperors, gangster nobles, and venal clergymen. Darklands emphasizes people's
belief in witches, magic, alchemists, and dragons. Guide your party of four on
a quest for fame, fortune, and immortality in the Dark Ages.

Also slated for future release from MicroProse and its Paragon subsidiary are
Codename: White Shadow (price unavailable), Flames of Freedom ($49.95), and
Twilight 2000 ($59.95).

Origin

Once again Richard "Lord British" Garriott and Origin have plans to transport
you to another world in the popular Ultima series. Look for improved
technology and better narrative elements in Ultima VII: The Black Gate
($79.95), scheduled for release in December.

The popular sword and sorcery elements combine with more screen detail,
256-color VGA graphics, new methods of conversing and interacting with
characters, and sounds so real that you can actually hear rivers flowing and
crickets chirping.

Another eagerly awaited release is Wing Commander II: Vengeance of Kilrathi
($79.95). This starfighter sequel offers exciting 3-D VGA graphics set on
digitized backgrounds and will take advantage of speech synthesis that employs
the speech chip in the CMS Sound Blaster. Also, another step in the Wing
Commander series is Chris Roberts' Strike Commander ($79.95). This time you
are part of a mercenary squad, flying a fine line between right and wrong,
profit and loss. You must determine the viability of missions from a moral as
well as a logistical standpoint. Pilot a staggering array of aircraft from a
P38 to an F22 Lightning 2 as you engage rival squadrons and renegade Third
World dictators.

Spectrum HoloByte

Wordtris ($39.95) is a must buy for any fan of word games and puzzle
challenges. Manipulate falling letter blocks so that they spell words either
horizontally or vertically on the screen.

The Cyrillic connection continues with Crisis in the Kremlin ($59.95), in
which you assume the role of Soviet President. Guide the U.S.S.R. out of its
present economic quagmire and inherent instability, or risk social
disintegration.

Sierra On-Line

The folks in the California mountains are moving boldly into CD technology,
with several of their more popular games slated for CD-ROM release. They
include Space Quest IV, Leisure Suit Larry I, and King's Quest V. All of the
CD-ROM titles are priced at $59.95 and are designed for the IBM PC.

Sierra's Dynamix subsidiary will bring Nova 9 ($34.95), a sequel to Stellar 7,
and Adventures of Willy Beamish ($59.95) to the PC screen this fall and
winter.

Strategic Simulations

SSI introduced its first IBM sports game, Tony La Russa's Ultimate Baseball
($49.95). Every essential detail of major league baseball is provided; play a
whole season or one game in a variety of levels. As current as today's
headlines, Conflict: Middle East ($59.95) is a new strategy war game focusing
on desert combat. SSI also has a new AD&D "goldbox" game, Gateway to the
Savage Frontier ($49.95).

Three-Sixty

Three-Sixty's fall lineup includes two war games and a sports package. Theatre
of War ($49.95) is a strategy war game boasting a 3-D filled-polygon
environment. Patriot ($59.95) is a land-based war game. The ABC Wide World of
Sports Winter Olympics 1992 ($49.95) gets the events down cold.

UBI Soft

In Battle Isle ($49.95) your goal is to capture the most terrain possible in a
world made of islands. For sports fans, Pro Tennis Tour II ($49.95), improves
on the original by including female opponents, the choice of strong or weak
points of your player, doubles play, a training mode, improved graphics and
better music. Here's your chance to improve your net play.

Virgin Games

Fantasy and flight fill the bill here. Conan the Cimmerian ($49.99) puts you
in the role of Conan. You must avenge the deaths of your family and friends
who were massacred by the ravening hordes of Thoth Amon, high priest of the
vile cult of Set. If that sounds like a little too much fun, you can get down
to business with Corporation ($59.99), an action game that has you tracking
down a mutant robot.

In flying is more in your line, then Thunderhawk ($49.99) puts you in the seat
of the AH-73M Thunderhawk helicopter gunship. Shuttle ($59.99) is designed as
an accurate simulation of NASA's Space Shuttle. During play you'll be asked to
perform various feats like repairing satellites, maneuvering your spacecraft,
and - oh yes - landing.